Extra Credit Assignment: The Nature of Things

Via Shores of the Dirac Sea I find The FQXi Inaugural Essay Contest (Summer 2008): THE NATURE OF TIME

Each essay contest will focus on a particular theme, question, or subject that the submitted work must directly address. For the current contest, this is “The Nature of Time,” including, but not limited to, the arrow of time; the emergence of time in quantum gravity; time, free will and determinism; time travel; the beginning or ending of time; and timelessness. Additionally, to be consonant with FQXi’s scope and goals, essays should be primarily concerned with physics (mainly quantum physics, high energy ‘fundamental’ physics, and gravity), cosmology (mainly of the early universe), or closely related fields (such as astrophysics, astrobiology, biophysics, mathematics, complexity and emergence, and philosophy of physics), insofar as they bear directly on questions in physics or cosmology.

Here’s the problem as I see it: the nature of time isn’t a science problem, it’s a philosophy problem. Many of the suggestions for essays aren’t really tied to physics all that strongly. Asking “how does time behave?” is a physics question, as is “how does this influence other phenomena?” But asking, “What is time, really?” is metaphysics.

That’s not to say the question has no value. If it can get someone to look at the problem from a different angle and it leads to a different description of nature, that’s great. But science is an investigation into how nature behaves, and not, fundamentally, into why it behaves that way. You reach the level of the four-year-old asking a question, and responding to each one with, “But why?” You can only give justification so many times before you run out of answers and have to say, “Go ask your mother.” Or, in the case of science, “We don’t know. It’s not the question we’re trying to answer.”

Science explains the operation of nature with models — mathematical descriptions that allow one to predict and explain what’s going on. But there’s nothing that guarantees that nature actually is this way, that the convenient terms we use are actually real. In many ways it’s bookkeeping. We notice that we can quantify certain things, like energy and work. Physics defines energy as the capacity to do work. That doesn’t tell you what energy is, it tells you why it’s useful. We have this quantity of something that doesn’t change — we can convert it from one form to another, and it allows us to predict things, like how far something will move, or whether an event will occur spontaneously. That’s useful to know! But it says nothing about what energy is. These are entries in a ledger that let us come up with an answer. Bookkeeping. This is one thing that can make thermodynamics difficult — all of those thermodynamic potentials make it advanced bookkeeping.

I recall being asked whether photons were real. I study atomic physics, so my reaction was, “Sure, photons are real.” Then I was asked about phonons. Nah — phonons are just a convenient way of describing vibrational modes of a lattice. Which is when it hit me that photons could just be a convenient way of describing the vibrational modes of an electromagnetic field. To a condensed matter physicist, I’m sure that phonons seem real. But we don’t do experiments that tell us that they are real, we do experiments that tell us how nature behaves. Nature may behave as if they are real, because we have accurately determined the properties, but that’s not the same thing. Physicists do this a lot, and some are easier to spot than others. We have electrons and holes in semiconductors. Are holes real, or are they just a convenient description of the lack of an electron? What is mass, anyway? What is charge? Is the Copenhagen interpretation of quantum mechanics the right one?

If You Eat All the Time, Don't Do the Crime

Criminals Who Eat Processed Foods More Likely To Be Discovered, Through Fingerprint Sweat Corroding Metal

“So the sweaty fingerprint impression you leave when you touch a surface will be high in salt if you eat a lot of processed foods -the higher the salt, the better the corrosion of the metal.”
Dr Bond added there was therefore an indirect link therefore between obesity and the chances of being caught of a crime. “Other research has drawn links between processed foods and obesity and we know that consumers of processed foods will leave better fingerprints,” he said.

That Settles It

I’ve made only a few few political posts, and most of those that touched on the upcoming elections have either been tongue-in-cheek or nonpartisan. But (to quote Tom Lehrer) I will digress, momentarily, from the mainstream of this evening’s symposium.

I can’t vote for the McCain-Palin ticket. If you don’t care why this is, then just go to the next post, because it won’t be about politics. If you do, I’m a bit puzzled, because I don’t think I’m going to sway anyone’s vote, nor are you going to sway mine. I’m venting. This is purely the lifting of the pressure-relief valve.

It’s not that I’m all that enamored of Obama; I can’t tell where the true policy ends and the pandering begins (for either candidate), and that bothers me. But I’m seeing out-and-out lies in recent political ads and speeches, and the worst of it seems to be coming from McCain. (Though this may be a function of my location with targeted ads). Is this the same man who decried such behavior in the last election?

I recall conversations I had when the primaries were starting up that McCain was somebody I could have voted for. But I was remembering the McCain of 2000, and this is not the same candidate. He’s not a maverick anymore. It occurs to me now that the more moderate candidate of 2000 might have been because Bush already had the far right locked up, and there was no ground to be gained by moving in that direction. Without that dynamic in play this time around, I see a candidate who has changed his stance on several issues, moving to the right, and gone out of alignment with me.

If there were any questions about that, the choice of Palin as a running mate answered them. Anti-science, anti-choice; someone who was promoting banning of books, choosing aides based on personal loyalty rather than qualifications, and conducting government business using private email to avoid having exposure subject to freedom-of-information laws that apply to government communications. I’m sick of crap like that.

And via nanoscale views I read that McCain will freeze science research funding the first year should he be elected.

“The purpose of the freeze is to evaluate each and every program, looking at which ones are worthwhile and which are a waste of taxpayer dollars,” Ike Brannon, an economist and senior policy adviser to McCain, told the Task Force on the Future of American Innovation at a private gathering in Washington, D.C.

Oh, joy. Politicians reviewing research programs to decide which ones are worthwhile and which ones are a waste.

So, circle gets the square, by default. (Even though you aren’t supposed to win that way)

TILT!

Atomic flippers seek tiny ball for pinball fun

Two “flippers” made from pairs of platinum atoms are made to move back and forth by firing electrons at them. All that is missing is the ball, says Harold Zandvliet at the University of Twente in the Netherlands.

Despite the light-hearted description of work, the team says its device is an important advance in atomic-scale engineering.

“This pinball machine elegantly shows that even on the scale of a few atoms, a device can be constructed that only operates if an external signal is applied,” Zandvliet told New Scientist.

Crunch Time

Beware the time-eater: Cambridge University’s monstrous new clock

The monster momentarily stops the turning dial with its foot to mark the minutes, shown as blue LED lights shining through slots. It was originally conceived by Taylor as a literal interpretation of the grasshopper escapement invented by his hero, the Georgian clockmaker John Harrison whose fabulously accurate mechanisms solved the problem of establishing longitude at sea.

Another h/t to Caroline

Somewhere, Under the Rainbow

Pictured: Rare upside-down rainbow spotted in the UK

Rainbows are formed when sunlight is refracted in a raindrop.

But in a circumzenithal arc, the colours are in reverse order from a rainbow, with violet on the top and red at the bottom.

The arc usually vanishes quickly because the cirrus clouds containing the ice crystals shift their position.

Ice particles in high cirrus clouds occur all year round, but circumzenithal arcs are usually obscured by lower level clouds.

Circumzenithal arcs are so named as they go around the zenith – the point in the sky directly above the observer- rather than the sun.

(Pedantic man notes that rainbows actually refract the light twice)

More on circumzenithal arcs

h/t to Caroline

On the Topic of Unstable Equilibrium

Most of what follows falls (as it were) under the heading of “what happens when you fail to keep the center of mass above the supports.” The “ooh, that’s gonna leave a mark” cringe-o-meter registers noticeably in some scenes.

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(The male gymnast’s vault at about 2:30 looks faked. Is that just me?)